
'Holy smokes': Huge log believed to be 50-million-years-old unearthed at N.W.T. mine
CBC
A log of wood believed to be 50-million-years-old has been hauled up from below ground at Diavik diamond mine in the N.W.T. — a find that researchers say is remarkable but not uncommon.
In a post about the discovery on Facebook last week, the mine described it as a 136-kilogram (300-pound) log from a redwood tree that it found 240 metres below ground. In an email, a Diavik spokesperson said it was discovered on Feb. 20 during regular mining at the A21 pit while miners were scooping kimberlite ore.
Diavik is located in the tundra on Lac de Gras about 300 kilometres northeast of Yellowknife.
"The kimberlite rock from which the wood was recovered has been dated to approximately 50 million years old using accepted age-dating techniques," they said. "Consequently, the materials encapsulated within the kimberlite rock, including this wood, are understood to be of the same age."
The spokesperson said pieces of wood are regularly recovered from Diavik's kimberlite pipes but this one is notable because of its size. They said that when wood is found in kimberlite, work is paused so that it can be safely removed.
"This discovery is significant, as it offers a rare glimpse into the distant past, enriching our understanding of the ancient environment. It also highlights how mining operations can contribute to scientific research and knowledge," the spokesperson wrote.
They didn't say exactly what would happen with the discovery, but did say that Diavik "retains" wood that it's found, has previously sent pieces for study and that it would be "discussing the future handling of such specimens" as the mine approaches closure.
The Prince of Wales Heritage Centre — the museum and archives for the N.W.T. government — already has a piece of 55-million-year-old wood from a metasequoia tree found at Diavik on display, and another from the neighbouring Ekati diamond mine believed to be 52-million-years-old within its stored collection.
An online record for the log from Ekati says that the metasequoia was a common swamp plant at the time and that when a kimberlite volcano erupted, the remains of the tree collapsed into the top and was encased in the kimberlite rock. "It is real wood, not mineralized or petrified," the entry reads.
A spokesperson for the territory's Department of Education, Culture and Employment said Tuesday the museum hadn't spoken to Diavik about its recent find.
Alberto Reyes on the other hand, an associate professor in the department of earth and atmospheric sciences at the University of Alberta, said he's reached out to Diavik — and is interested in getting a sample of the tree.
"It's a really remarkable find," he said. "I've seen those kinds of things before but also, holy smokes that is a huge log."
Reyes, a co-author on a recent paper about evidence of palm trees in the N.W.T. 48 million years ago, said he was interested to find out what setting the log was recovered from.
He said scientists know that 50 million years ago the region would have been a humid temperate forest ecosystem with metasequoia, hazel, chestnut and oak-like trees.













